military strategy and tactics
Hu Lue long Tao, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ǔ L ü è L ó NGT ā o, which means the book of war, the art of war, and the strategist's tactics. It's from sad Hangzhou.
Idiom explanation
Synopsis: refers to the legendary "three synopsis" written by Huangshi Gong. Tao: refers to six Tao. Sanlue and LiuTao are ancient military books.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Ji of the Ming Dynasty wrote the poem "sad Hangzhou City:" once you rush to the West and East, jade cups and gold cups scatter. The capital of the Qing Dynasty is too small, the sky is too high, and the tiger is a little bit like a dragon and the Tao is a little bit like a tiger
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. Great ambition is rare for thousands of years. Guo huaruo's poem "Fenghe and commander Chen give the poem original rhyme"
military strategy and tactics
both sides are willing to do the thing - liǎng xiāng qíng yuàn
leaving evil unchecked spells ruin - yǎng yōng chéng huàn
use one 's position to get even with another person for a private grudge - gōng bào sī chóu